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Getting to 'Yes': Overcoming Client Reluctance to Engage in Chair Work
- Source :
- FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 11 (2020), Frontiers in Psychology
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Goals Securing clients' active and enthusiastic collaboration to participate in activities therapists would like to implement in therapy (e.g., free association, in vivo exposure, or the engagement in chair work) is a core mission in therapy. However, from the clients' perspective, these tasks frequently represent novel challenges that can trigger anxiety and reluctance. Thus, a key element in therapy is the negotiation between therapist and client to move beyond such reluctance to potentially effective therapy activities and, at the same time, maintain positive relational affiliation between therapist and client. In this research we examined (1) a collection of therapist proposal/client response sequences that were geared toward recruiting participation in chair work and (2) sequences containing hesitation or instances where decisions to engage in chair work were deferred and related relational disaffiliation. Our goal was to identify the conversational resources (both verbal and non-verbal) that worked to reject a proposed activity (or convey impending rejection) and examine the interactional practices directed at resolving client reluctance. Method We used the conceptual and methodological resources of Conversation Analysis to examine a corpus of proposal/response sequences that targeted chair work entry in Emotion-focused Therapy. Results The resulting data set included some smooth and successful engagements and others more challenging, involving clients delaying or resisting engagement with chair work. Clients were found to defer or refuse engagement through a range of resources such as withholding a response (silence), questioning the authenticity of the task, or directly refusing. We identified specific therapist practices that facilitated engagement in "refusal-implicative" contexts such as proffering "or" alternatives, offering extended rationales for the activity (accounting), and elaborating on the proposals. We observed that the therapists' deontic stance (mitigated and reduced claims to authority) and moderated epistemic positioning (deference to the client's primacy of knowledge and information) played an important role in facilitating engagement. Conclusion Our research highlights the kinds of interactional sequences in which clients and therapists are able to achieve alignment in mutually working toward chair work entry. Based on these observations, we offer some practical advice to therapists in formulating proposals to engage clients during in-therapy work.
- Subjects :
- conversation analysis
media_common.quotation_subject
lcsh:BF1-990
CONTINGENCY
Social Sciences
emotion-focused therapy
Resistance (psychoanalysis)
ORGANIZATION
Entitlement
050105 experimental psychology
Task (project management)
directives
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
THERAPEUTIC ALLIANCE
PSYCHOTHERAPY
EMOTION
Psychology
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
affiliation
General Psychology
Original Research
media_common
SEQUENCES
deontics
business.industry
05 social sciences
chair work
Deference
Public relations
Silence
Negotiation
lcsh:Psychology
Conversation analysis
recruitment
ENTITLEMENT
business
Free association (psychology)
RESISTANCE
PROPOSALS
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 16641078
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 11 (2020), Frontiers in Psychology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9ce1c95fa778b4eec429a7bcea002946